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FOR SALE Small, well-established hobby shop ( 1946), specializing in trains. Center-city Philadelphia location. Qualifications for new owners: Energy, enthusiasm, taste, capital. Helpful: Retail or hobby experience; husband and wife team ideal; active participation needed. Bonus: Several yearly buying trips. Reply by letter only: Hobby Shop, 637 Revere Road, Merion Station, Pa. 19066 Scale line of lost-wax castings for modeI railroaders. John once operated a hobby shop in Berkeley, Calif. Then he worked for two other model railroad manufacturers before starting his own business. The Cal-Scale line was introduced to the hobby at the 1959 NMRA national convention, which was held in San Diego that year. Before introducing its line of products, Associated Brass built up an inventory of 20,000 parts. Originally, all the work was done by John, Harry Parker, and the late Bruce Bechtold. Today, the company employs 14 people who produce approximately 20,000 parts each week. The company now makes products for commercial and industrial markets in addition to its model railroad business. Concerning his business, John had this to say: "The art of investment casting remains Custom Cars by•...0gauge at its finest. *-.- F, ikrl'.. 4/' -I r . 2,1.. 4 .li:... miz•illilillilillb ' • I or Direct. Free Color Brochure and Carlist on Request. Suggested List $9.00. N.Y. Residents Add 6% Sales Tax. Distinctive Quality - Colorful, Authentic Railroad Heralds Diecast Trucks - Operating Knuckle GKris GModel Trains Couplers - Will Mate with Lionel. Compare, and You'll Buy KMT. Money Back Guarantee. Dealer ..i/9/ *Fan"•i,i'LA"£4"Ed'9,*den:/9"/2:2M•i/il•-•ii• RO. BOX 754 ENDICOTT, N.Y. 13760 an exacting challenge. There are no shortcuts. The skill of the employees and their strict adherence to set practices remain the secret of our quality work." John has remained active as a hobby- ist. He has built four HO layouts and has a new one in the planning stage. His last layout, the Imperial & Western Ry., had to be torn down when the family moved to a new house. That layout was big-10 x 52 feet-and had been under construction for 10 years. He says his next effort won't be quite that ambitious. It will be the Eldorado & Northfork Logging Co., representing a logging company established about 1890 but which is still struggling to stay in business in 1957. John wrote an article about a similar 1, . - 1.-7/5.. 042. t.i :':-4'Ar•. •..' ; . ·. .43/*..» ... f l. M ....... 116'lit**PIPfl:FFI-" 1:1•11 . 4- .r.. ..1-='-fie,*81 -ZZ'7•= -7---- ..r- ' *.. ' lilli BR I. . . - . Rall: Comes ready-to-run. All you have to do is clean and paint the body for your favorite line. Will run on overhead wire. Brill Old Tim-e-Trolley $22.50 American made, Parts always available See your Dealer Mr. Dealer-Order Direct OVERREAD WIRE SYSTEM $5.50. Includes 12 poles. 25' wire and necessary clips. No Soldering. d PCC & IRR trolleys also available, $22.50 ea. 21 Howard St., Montoursville, PA 17754 "Un.. mav SUpep 13254taili#g -£ 4 - 1-1 5 e .i. 6.- / f. ••03621-'•': .i../ il• "I I -\:. 4*' 4. C # 74 r='---.- 7 .. .· SEND 500 TODAY, FOR OUR 28 PAGE FULLY ILLUSTRATED CATALOG. 4#A'C C• SEND TO: CAL-SCALE Dept. "M", P 0 BOX 475 PINEDAlE CAlIFORNIA 93650 .... PARTS HUNDREDS of BRASS and PLASTIC parts to "INDIVIDUALIZE" your caxs and locomotives. real logging operation, West Side Lumber Co., which was featured in the October 1958 issue of TRAINS magazine. He has also had articles published in MODEL RAILROADER. Originally, three things got John interested in model railroading: an interest in trains, seeing HO layouts in operation at the 1939-1940 Golden Gate International Exposition in San Francisco, and his acquaintance with the son of M. Dale Newton. (Dale was the originator of the Red Ballline of car kits.) Concerning the hobby, John writes: "For a period of time I worked so hard S.I0361160 48 A & l,$24 .M• flk. U at model railroading that it became a chore. I was trying to imitate a specific prototype railroad. Now I try to create the kind of railroad I like. I follow prototype practices but I build engines and details that I like to see." He suggests to others: "Create a history and a story of your railroad empire, then model it as you like. Always have reference to actual elenients but use your own taste. If you like things new and neat, make it that way. If you like them to reflect the fact that your operation is a bit short of cash, make it look like a small independent railroad with a lot of character: dirty but dependable. But above all else, enjoy it. It's the greatest and most challenging hobby in the world." John earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from the California College of Arts & Crafts and has taken some additional studies at the University of California, Berkeley. John, his wife, and their son and daughter live in Fresno, Calif. John and his son Model Railroader